- Cape Jlkg #ci0tt tflfttte.
VOLUAIK 7. CAPE ISLAND. NEW JERSEY. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 3. lSlil. NUMBER IS.
- ,#» af -i i IA s S|| J?! 5vi ! lj3 o is5 si* --fet 1 j 5"nElf»s^|rn s ts (oi«;:s= ; ?s . • t- u 11 1 lis PHI i 1 « a i . Sl! 3 lill-s ™ sss.'s* H -s = * i: 1-* « «i i! M ; 2 M 0 5 H § € 5 5? i|1 . j * I 2 l"Trj| f ili? Si! t* » £555 •? u* ! 2. ENOCH EDMUND'S CAPE ISLAND TORE. • 4 K ENTIRE FRESH STO* K OF GOOD*, ,'u.t AtKCIvnl. •oaolStlHoI bkVGOOllS.GROCKKir:-. PROVISION*. HARDWARE. BOOT* Ml* ; SHOW. EARTHKN-WAKK. CIUCKKRV-VVAKL. TIN-WARE. sr , which will I"- sold for <>*». lor lUeqnlvairnt iii runic.) •• ehrnji »• Goo i« ">l ' the lUf quwllty We •nlJjn the cuuut} ul U»;<Mayr. AUni so auutlmrot u( READY MADE CLOTHING eooalallac of OAT*, PANT*. VISIT* 4 UATHIN.1 CLOTHES. Cnrli anil (•■•» IV»r Hair, HlfRORT, I'lXE ISO OAR ttOUD, DB11TEKD *»- Til* larcret atoek ol FaMII.V MEDICINES; In tor county, krpt on hand. Cure for almuat cvcThe Attention of buyrora la sollrilrd. at.4FM.-y SAMUEL R. LUDLAM, (joceeaawr lo GEOHGE L. I.CDlAM.) House*. Sign and Ornamental PAINTER & GLAZIER, C'APK MU*0. 5. J. PAINTING of all klfttla rarcttlril in snort atjrto. _ N. 11— COUNTRY I JBUI.XG 'lone with ncatt.e,. X awl dUpwlrli. ■»>' • NOTICE. ALL PERSON* INDEBTED In I he Sl'BM HIII! It ON BOOK ACCOUNT. ate ecflneatOit liij Call mail fertile, on. r^hef.irc the troth day ol Ni-veml«-r nest, •» Jmrf.-fOM •JOHN VVII.KY. Cape .May Court Ihejer. Sept. It l«t. EARNEST REQUEST. Art1! fw --*■"■"»-« uner'tM ■rwmnt. w ith the JvTublLtta r, „r- )j»KMJ.ILV HI UCHSTW- to CAl.lt AND SETTLE Ihe aame wnnnt-T nw.%r. It la ho|«! that thl* requrat w ill he /— t-D Cajw hland, September 5, tv«I. m "The UstON Now, and Forkvkk-" WHOLESALE & RETAIL Grocery A: Provision Store. r » n*HE SutweriVef R now rrerlrine a frr.h .uptdynf Jlfu-wla Irotn I'hilulelpble, and will acll thru, AVhulrsalr or Relall. at PHILADELPHIA PSICSfi. At hta Store, lo-atrd nt NATlLN.iL HALL. The 'attention of COUNTRY MERCHANT* and hoy era 4(1 enteral.!* railed, to ootlr." the tvl thai Ihry . can i*> th-ii food* terr a» Cheap a» in Phil* n- | phta. c.llaoil aak prtoee awl raan.i eGme.ru. and PruvMoua, hrlotr nuKh»*lns rlaewhrte U ■ AARUNGAHRLTSW.N. \ Capo bland. Juiw ttth, tsci. FORTRESS MOKROE Is Fillod with our men. ,And a NEW STOCK OF GOODS has been put in "Win. Townrend'e Slott ?|»l.*aai a aoil Aae Hand lew. \ Mav« Plpaa and Crochet Cuttn «H Fat »*ir at tt . Townwad'., J.inaee.1 Oil, I.mnp aad Poatl *tnrvh, Ladlea' Cloth aad Mmw "trip*, For Sale a! W. Towoaend .. Floe White and nrowa MnaHaa, ink'i tottou and Klirwen e Oil, For »aie at W. Townaend'f. dTntoti Cloth and While Lewi, Ailk Mrlpwl I'anaent e* ami Jew* Harp1. ~r.P~ K()r a( vv' TownaetB;-*. TmilartTa MacenNoe and CaAm Milla, a. Uolee I'llnU and Wall Iw.wr, Fnr Sale at W. Townaend * I Dny1* faaalmere. «:ot Hall* and riuld, *""1 °T" "* "»a. vv. Family Ne.llrinaa and Rawette Lamp*. Hitr* White Bniahea and Tin-Ware. For Cwlr al W. Town>«tul'a Jlatmrca. Brown and White TaMe Coerr*. Chrcae, Coinh*. Maekrtel and Aaokre PalU, For Rale at W Townaeud'a. Jflmir Burke'.. Shoea and Waah Boatda, Wooden Rnkrw, Tea, and Ollne Soap. Jtaleralu*. Corn, and <>.l Clnth TaMe Clnth«. ' For Me at W. Townarod*a. . Hoalrry. Drted Aprtew «padea. ami Coloo®, iGoahen Butteraod Clam BaakM*. For Me at W . Ibwnarnd v ! Abo. all klndt of Pnr Gooda, Groreriea ami Pro, laloaa ,fce-,he . u.oallr aohl In a variety itnrr. May ! he had at W. TUwaaoadb *»»r--. WaahinfM atnet, 1 uppoell* (Mean Mreet c>pe bland. Mateh tmh, iMt. em " BENTISTHY. DR. J. F- LEAMINQ, Dsxrar. f. OFFICE DAVb CAFE MAY C. ».— Tu«».laya. * 8E A VJJ.LE— HiurMlayi, FfiJajl nuJ Ihe lomnpon of SnUirJny.. Aa-Tl.RX* MODERATE— CONDITIONS t UK. Ao*.*. l*«1 _ " XtlrerlitT J our busiuet*.
I " TP ■ ■ m «_r wdM. I « LIU £8 ON THE DEATH OF OEN. LYON. ' 1 l . r; Br*r him away— be hath to iRht and tell |i Where the hravrat met on tbr h.ttlr It. 11 1 i v | Bear him away with Ihe dead to dwell— i '.he dead whom Ihe grave henceforth awl ' ahleld. | € i When Unrr* rtv«hrd In tljr morning «un 1 , And plume* bent low lo the Whlaperlrur leeeie. j , . Where cchoea pealed to the. pealing gun, I . ! And hlli-lopa paled with their cloudy wtealhm j ' ' Where trumpet-about and the wall of death, | Where cla.h nf atma and Ihe buele'a atralu IhMT on the ulns'a of the morning'* breath, | t He tousht and fell un Ihe tdouly plain. a | I Bear him away to Ihe warrior'* lomh, _ j j J Far from Ihe buttle and lever of Hie; I. Lny idm where Rower* the frnhe.t bloom ' And Ml ring hiid* come— be hath done with t .trtfe. . Sept. Slat, IMI. — " t *■ RMnrdl^EaJR 1W *• f From Ihr N.-waik Mereury. I OWUUvL MeCLELLAN. Our liVf'ps for the future arc largely 1 : built apoDiliecliaracter and energy of this ' (triieral. We are scarcely interested in ' uiiy thing so much n* the circumstances > which vierelojte what uiunner of Dian he ' is. It is fearful to thiuli what terrific ' rt'tiponsibility is re|)0*ed in a man of < t fiirt ! And yet itery thing *eems t» thour thai this ytiuihftil (jcncrul is the man fo' the^occut-ion. 1 The single incident most completely 1 proving this is the "order" respecting ; ihu Sabbath, lately pronmlgntcil. ' It : wua a hold, brave, heroic mail who coil 1 ceived and prepureiFtliat order. When was tip; like ever iasneil before, except j by Washington 7 There is bravery and wisduui conjoined in if. Bravery — for • war is not the sehool of piety, and those i who ftiir (iod are there espveiully likely to risk or obmio the scorn of their os-v socia'les. Moral courage is the highest | courage ! And there is wisdom iu it, beyond all doubt. To becure rest Tor t lie troops from work, parade, excitement, is wise. All' experience profes^ the nt-CMiity of the day of rest, at fy*kt ' a« oflen as . every sevvnlli day. The Frepch thought that one day in ten was best, hut-ihef m<oii found that God's ap-p-yiutpient was wiser. Hut this is not r all. There is wisdom iu it because it gratilira the cravings of thn multitudes . under nrms, fdwaja habituated to the | | owe-slruck siilluewt, the psalms and ; I hymns nnd prayers of the holy Sabbath! ; 1 There is even greater wisdom in It, 'be- j causes it satisfies the wishes and the | j principles if -the religious patriot. Ii ; ) I is in unison with that sentiment of dnty which is tlic foundation of the zeal «f ii..- North. It tends to generate und in-'-crease it among our soldiers-— and for ' that reason, principally, it was highly | necessarr.- ' T'ic motives of the North ond the 1 v'.iBih in this contest are very ilifT rent The South hate the North — they des pised them, by reoson of certain as sumed differences in manners and oharnNter, and detest them, because, for yeaj sons which they will not understand, the j j North excel them in material, vigible ; prosperity. The North do not hate the | South— in spile of all they .do, all they j 1 hate dor.o, all tl ev undoubtedly will do, j they cannot, do not. — will not hale : • them.. We hold thera as our brothers — i misguided, deluded, frenzied, lunatic,
! but still our brothers ! And we wish to put down their rebellion, conquer their i jMlmosiiy, "subjugate" their treason, i . while for themselves we have filing I tint pity aud sorrow 1 Oar motivq in ! the war is self-defence. Defeu9e of its | life and existence by the best,, the free- '• ! est, Che* past, most protective Oorern- ' ment the world ever ssw, giving the • most nnd kindliest care to every citizen j i for the feast least return in taxes or scr- > ' vices, against men who take up arms to | cob mankind of its greatest treasure — . this is our only motive. We pity and I 8 ! mourn wfcilo w« strike fi'e pray for | the victims of our arms. Nothing! _ ; would so gratify <u as the return by our | ! lunatic lirethrcti to the j»cacc, freedom, i T
j aud happiness always heretofore enjoy- ( I ed, and which is still their's when they i 1 choose to have it. • Nor is this nil. — i | We fight to preserve a nationality which i | is the greatest" bulwark of freedom ; in i 1 which all mankind Centre their hopes j 1 ond which, to the right hand of j Christianity. The world will be dark in- ' deed, when our light is put out ! Yon r ! cannot annul this nation without check- r forceulurics probably, the eiviliza- * ; tion aud conversion of mankind. 1 j This brief,*' sententious "special or- t ! der," shows that this young, Ijrare Gen- s i era! sees and believes all t. is — that lie ' j enthusiastic iu bis holy cuusc mid • knows what policy there is in infusing * and increasing the same fc< ling in every 1 northers heart. Evidently he nims at I creating the, highest •-•lass" of soldiers, t steady, God-fearing men, CromwclISan 1 fighting for duty and that alone. * We re-print — because it cannot lie I too often read — this pithy, eloquent or. c der, in* which this youthful General re- j veals himself as both the . hero and the ' sage. The annuls of history have notli- : < ing finer. It persuade* us that we can t safely trust mid wait .It has the spirit ; ' of Washington, the style and ring o! i Napoleon ! J ' May God Inspire the troops and the *y natiou with the spirit it displays ! , f srixiAt. on to: it xo. 5. J ' IlKAnqt'ARvr.it* Auvrv or rue IbiToNAC, \ ' I \V ASIII.VISTOS. Sep! f. IHGI. ) , The Major-' eneral Ooi.im imline .b-sir-* , 1 iiml rerpiHsl* thai in the future lliere u<..y be a inore perfei-l fur llie .--aMialii I on ill* part of .hi" coiunian.1. We ,.<v , , fiithting in » liuly canw. ami slioabl i-iule.iv. , or lo I'eserve ihe l<enivu favor of the tlrealor. IJlllefS.lii llie rns<- of nil nltark l.v I the enemy, or some other extHo'nic niilitsry 1 nepes'iiy. it i- comniehileiUd eoiinnunilinL' officer* ilial nil work shall lm mi'p-rdeil 1 ^on the Sabtuitli ; Hint no unneci'Ssay move- ' - mrnla shall th' malleoli thutilnv; ilial tho i men shall, a* far as possible, b.i permitteil 1 lo n>t (Voiii llieir Inlavr- : llml they slinll i »t Ion il Itivilio sorvie* nflor the rii-lonmry t . ; morning. ins|wrlioN. nnd llml ■itffirers noil men nlik- n«e llieir iiifiaenre llio ; .i ii | most decorum uml qaiot /<n that day. ; ehe>Jononil t/iimuiunding rjniivrchs tlii" u* j ■ iio idle form. One day's rest i* necessary I ! frty men an animal*. Store than this, the ' I observance of the holy day of tin* God of I i Mercy and V lialtie* is our sacred daty. • tiro. U. McUlellax. j Major General I 'mum: riding • I S. Williams, Assistant Adjutant-General. TO THE LADIf b OF PENNSYLVANIA, HEW JEBSEY. AND DELAWABE. I I TheBccretnry of the Ladies' Aid. of J Philadelphia, having spent a fortnight, j after the battle of Hull Run, In a per- . | sonol inspection of the camps and mili : | tnry hotpiiois in and nround Washington, reports that these localities present ; r 1 to that association a wide field for their { ! benevolent operations. This field the i ■ | association resolved at once to occupy, r and with the assistance of Mr. Lesley : in the Wnr office, and othor patriotic . gentlemen, have established in Washington a depository fur such hospital stores ' a- under their auspices may be forwarded to that point. This raeasur- was . necessary to the end that the donors . j might have the control and direction of f j these stores, and thus Be assured that t ; they would be promptly appropriated to e ; the use of those lor .horn they were inf tended The depository has been . ! placed under the care of excellent lap \ dies, of undoubted loyalits and efficien- _ cy. who will, from time lo time, visit the camps and hotpitals, and with the
the approval of the surgeons, and the .aid of kind and skilful nurses, make j snch distribution of the supplies under their care as they find proper and ueces- : sary. ] The surgeon general, as well os the | surgeons of tho respective hospitals, we I arc assured, will afTord every reasonable ; facility for carrying out these benevoj lent, purposes- The miachievipns re- ! port, that delicacies designed for tho j *irt and wounded, are served up at the • repasts of l*« surgeon, we take pleasure I in saying that we have the strongest i rtsaons for believing is witboot fouuda- ; Lion. Without socb an agency as bos been J described, supplies forwarded mi^ht be
. dispensed with little discriniinaii<ty, or, as has already occurred, might remaia weeks in unopened packages^ while our generous defenders were languishing, perhaps dying, for want of . such supplies. OTSr undertaking is one of magnitude, one from which patriotism ond hu- i inanity forbid us to shrink. If the la- ' dies of our country could witness the i presented in the hospitals after a i there is no sacrifice they would • tint willingly make foe the relief of the ' sufferers. If they could hear the wouu- ■ did Milliter's expression of gratitude for ' cup of cocoa, u glass of water, or the i smoothing of his hard pillow by woman's bands; if they could see his des- • pondency giving way to confidence and. to courage, for n renewal of the conflict, on the slightest manifestation of woman's sympathy, donations would in so that our depository could not . contain them. To the men of our laad belongs the ' honor of lighting our country's battles ; is the duty and privilege of minis- | • tering to their comfort when sick "or : i wounded. To the Indies of Pennsylvania and I- adjacent Suites, we therefore confidently "-appeal for aid avid co-operation in lliis ' glorious undertaking. We coll upon | them as lovers of their couirry, n*/' ! friends of humanity, as followersof lljni trio tctnl about daimj good ; to forward coiitribiiTiuns iu money, wr-wv aaok li*!*- . 1 pilai »t.ne>, not furnished by the Got^ I erniiieiil, as they may -judge needful for • the sick and wounded of our army and ' aavv. j The following nrc some of the orti- • clcs wanted, viz ; I Wodini shirts end drawers nnd knit ! stockings. Also, feather pillows, nir , beds, bed clothing, jellies, 'dried frnils, apple- butter, crackers, wines, brandy, | ale. white sugar, ten, chocolate, cocfHTTT ! fiirinuccous prcporulions, spices, pickles, dried beef, hams, citric ncid, oil of 1 lemon, Ac. Ac. Pickles nrc most tcj ceptabie to the men in the camps, «s well as to those in the hospitals; In" | | some cases they are- esteemed by the ■surgeon valuable adjuncts. I Donations in money tnuy be sent to | Mrs. Stephen C'olwcll, treasurer of the ' j Ladies' Aid, N. E. vomer of Eleventh , and Arch streets, or may be banded to ■ I Mrs. Joel Jones, president, No 620 J Walnut at reel, or to Mis John Harris,
■ i secretary. No. HOC I'iue street. i j Other contributions tnny jie forwar ■ dt'l, freight prepaid, to the "Ladies' • Aid, care of John P. Roads, Esq., No , 701 Walnut st., Philadelphia," marked "hospital stores." Small parcels to be i ; packed in boxes or bales, may be sent ■ in Fridayt, between 9 o'clock A. M i ond 2 o'clock, P. M , . to the chdrcb, i ■ northeast comer of Twelfth ond Walnut » streets AH will promptly he forwarded - to the depository of the Ladies' Aid io I Washington. Letters may be addressed To cither of • the officers already nitnd. Ed.tors of papers io Pennsylvania, i New Jersey, nnd Delaware are respect- - fully requested to giye the foregoing ( - ono or more insertion gratuitously, and l ask for^t the attention of their readers, ; SKETCH OF COL, KULLKtAN. j The Detroit Advertiser gives the foi- 1 r loiritg interesting sketch of the bcro of . Lexington . Colonel James A. Mulligan was horn e in the city of Utica, New York, in the e year 1829, nndVig consequently in his e thirty-second year. His parents wore i - natives of Irelnxuk His mother, after the dMth of his fae tlier, which was while he was a child, rce movfd lo Chicago, where she has re*i- ! e ded with hw sou for tin- past twenty | it three years He wa^ edocated at the j I- Catholic College of North Ch cajo, u i- ! der the supariutendeuce of the Ucv. Mr. 1 n Cinsellar, now of Now York city, ic Re is a strict member of the Catholic ' i > i
church. In 1852, and^SSS and 1554, he read law in the office of the Hon. Isaac X. Arnold, Congressman from the Chicago d strict. For n short time ho edited the "Western Tablet," in Chicago. In 1856 he was admitted an attor-ncy-at-law iu Chicago. "At this lime he the position of second lieutenant in the Chicago Shield- Guards, one of the companies attached to the Irish brigade now in Missouri, uud.which did so well at Lexington. In the winter of llio". Senator Fitch, . of Indiana, tendered him a clerkship in tlie Department of the Interior.- He accepted lite position, and spent the winter ui Washington. During hk residence there he corresponded with the . Ultra Telegraph. After Ids return front Washington ho was ek-ctcd captain of the Shields Guards. On the news arriving of the bumbardmcnt of Fort Sumptcr he threw his sou! into the national cause. The Irish American companies held a meeting, of which he was eh lirman. Shortly afterwards lie went to Washingtoti with a letter, written by the late I Senior DougloK on his death-bed, to the President, Djflili lag "*H regiment to bo called thF*rfTrisb Brigade. He was elected ijoio itel, aud immediately went to vyefk with a wiU. Tlic course of tho /^'Brignde'^ up to the battle of Lexington is well kHoivn; it has nobly, bravely, and honorably done its duty. : 11a is a . rigid temperance man, although lie is jocund and whok-souled to a fault, lie is six feet three inches in ; height, with a wiry clastic frame, a large, lustrous hazel eye, an open, frank, • Celtic face, stumped with courage, pluck, ami independence, surmounted t with a bushy profusion of hair, tinctured r ; with gray. GIVE OS A MILLION HEN. • "Though vvc believe President Lin* ■colli lias pursued n tolerable vigorous course of policy, the stale of the couutry shows conclusively that if tliis re"i hellion ii to bo cruslnd out at nil, his ' action must he still more vigorous and " ' decided. c '*A half million of men have already been ruHed for, 'and ult hough all of " itiein have not -entered the field, l»o sane e man believes they arc now, or under . • any circumstances can be sufiiciout, to • tAumph over the South and bring the J I war lo a speedy and buuorabie lermiiiai' | tion.
' "One mlllfoft men well armed and rqaiped, must enter the field before the snows of winter have clothed the hills of the North, or the Stars and Stripes mhst be lowered at the feet of the' foe. Aud if one million is not enough, let us have two million, and if that wHI not suffice, let every -man, without a single ' exception, from the fatjner among the hills of New England and the herdsman who guards his flock* upon the pTaric* of the .West up to President Lincolu himself, he called into the field ; and let ' us then sweep down upon the South like an array of tocust aud destroy 1 everything in our pathway, and drive ihe whole Sonth, black% and all, Into ' il» Gulf, and make a desert of the ' blooming fields of which we were once ' 1 so proud." | The above is taken from the Uuritnii* • Journal, v democratic paper, published r iu Michigau. BDCKNEB'S TREACHERY. 1 Hen. Buckner. commander of the KenJ ' lucky State Guard, as soon as the Legi.du5 ture orders the rebel* to evacuate the , . rilate, pall* a couledcrsto commission as brigadier general out of his pocket, aud b- v sum hi* proclamation ; and then it is fnaud fiat hi* positions ha** all W»:i arranged " j for a long time for precipitating Kentucky, " ' by force, into the power of tho confederate* I A* ihe Me npfe* Advocatd emy*. "The south needs her territory, (che territory of i Kentucky.) ami must have it. though at the - expo nee ••[ Wood and conqaes'.'* Daring ' all the Kentacky neutrality treason h»* ' 1 1 u -n winding it- falsi coils uhent -the Sura ; mid now it will take a mighty effort in c throw tbyui oil.

